Overall, the movie still has some bright spots.
First, the heroine Emma Stone is not bad. She is very suitable for this kind of small freshness. She is more sincere and individual than Kirsten Dunst. The male protagonist, Andrew Garfield, was not very optimistic at first. He was thin and tall with a small face, always a little absent-minded and evasive. But he burst into tears when the policeman was dying and faced Emma at the end. He acted so realistically, and not only had more admiration for his acting skills.
Second, the love scene is better than the old version, and the story is more delicate. And the heartbreak when Spider-Man has to leave her in order to protect her plays out well. The ending foreshadows that their love will continue.
Third, bad guys are no longer masked, and they can be forgiven for becoming bad, unlike the first Spider-Man villain who was bad at home, and immortality is not enough for common people's anger.
But the shortcomings of the plot are obvious:
1. The police at first are too stupid to catch Spider-Man until the lizardmen go to the building and are about to destroy it. Spider-Man has never harmed anyone, and when the students witnessed the Lizardman, he didn't even pursue it, which is very unreasonable.
2 Suddenly after the lizard man turned back into a human, his conscience was awakened and he saved Spider-Man, and he suddenly became a savior after being put to death just now. This kind of transformation seems to be too fast, and this plot seems too abrupt.
In addition, the special effects are still well done. As Spider-Man jumps between buildings, it looks like a roller coaster ride. This stunt angle is good.
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